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  1. The cork has long since popped on Climate Change and there is no way of getting it back in the bottle. While the accelerated destruction of the natural world is tragic beyond belief, we all voted for it.

    We vote for it every time we go to the supermarket.

      1. Isn’t it interesting that deniers are unable to link the rise in CO2 levels with increasingly warmer years? It’s like, NAH, NAH, NAH, I’M NOT LOOKING!! I’M NOT LOOKING!!

        Luckily, Trump will only be in office for 4 years before the American public have a gutsful of his idiocy. His successor will have a hell of a mess to clean up!

    1. Worse those fueling up at the petrol stations, they deserve to be “stoned” (their vehicles) for continuing to blow more exhausts into the atmosphere.

  2. Yep Frank,

    All this when our once pristine aquifers are being poisoned and the water levels under our land that feed them are now seriously being depleted by greedy foreign corporations!!!!!!

    Truly now a bloody war is being waged against our country by global elitist’s.

  3. Trump, Key, English, Little, Morgan, Peters, Goff…..city councilors, district councilors, bureaucrats, bankers, corporations, opportunists……all have the same agenda: fuck the planet and screw the next generation for the sake of short-term affluence and short-lived Ponzi schemes.

    Their plan is working: highest ever atmospheric CO2, and rising at the fastest rate in the geological history of the Earth.

    And the consequences of the greed and stupidity and cowardice that characterise western societies and the idiot brigade that is in charge of western societies are becoming increasingly dire:

    https://ads.nipr.ac.jp/vishop/#/extent

    Needless to say, the race to see who can behave most deplorably is being won by Americans, but Australians, British, Canadians and New Zealanders etc. are not far behind.

    Trump is a little more extreme than some of the other so-called leaders, of course, in his willingness to blatantly promote that which is unsustainable and damaging to the future.

    Ultra-fast planetary meltdown underway:

    https://ads.nipr.ac.jp/vishop/#/extent

  4. So it’s a choice between a slow death by climate change and inundation, or a slightly faster death through nuclear war, radioactive fallout, and the Nuclear Winter?

    Christ, hand me a whiskey bottle. I’d rather end it by drinking myself to oblivion.

    Thank you America for voting in that evil bastard!

  5. Yes, all true, the above, but maybe Kiwis could start at home, there is damned little to be proud of here, the over 80 percent “renewable” electricity we have was simply a nice heritage to receive from past generations that built many hydro damns, using opportunities and seeing ahead.

    What the hell is being done today though, all this talk about electric cars, which need much more electricity than we are able to generate with the hydro generation we presently have. And business and so also need power, so what is the plan, what is happening, much talk and little else, I fear.

    Every day I see almost every person here in Auckland jump into a fossil fuel powerd car and drive, drive, drive, adding to the problem, no thought to change behaviour here, same as in the US.

    1. There is discouragement from local and national government to make transitional changes that move away from fossil fuels.

      National threatened not to ratify the Unitary Plan if it followed the wishes of most Auckland respondents who identified they wanted a higher density city with better transport. They demanded – and got – SHA’s which follow no planning construct, but an application of landowners for approval for change to residential zoning. See the SOUL protest movement to see how this works in actuality.

      Any suggestion that a capital-uplift tax be imposed on properties that benefitted from rezoning without effort or input from their owners, was summarily dismissed during non-public meetings within Auckland Council. This means that many have received considerable increases in value without any requirement to pay tax on it. Land bankers rejoice. This fund could have been used as a social housing fund or a substantial transition fund for Auckland, but that opportunity was given away without regard.

      National’s response to climate change is indicated by their appointments to climate change Minister: Simon Bridges and Paula Bennett are visible examples of their disdain.

      Their pursuit of the RoNS when the economic equation did not work out, shows how their obsession with roading contracts would never be replaced with considered long term transport transitions.

      Not to mention the sale of our energy companies on the stockmarket.

      In 2014 both Meridian and Contact energy changed their buyback payment for excess power from around 25c per kilowatt hour to 7-8c.

      Not only is there no incentives, there are often roadblocks put in the way for those who attempt to make changes at a personal level.

      1. Having closely followed that Unitary Plan debacle, where the government basically pressured the Ministry of Environment appointed “independent hearings panel” into doing what it expected from it, I know a bit about what you are talking or writing about.

        The Auckland Unitary Plan has been decided on by the government having firstly appointed a hearing panel that was full of consultants, many of whom formerly worked for Council and for certain businesses. The Judge may have been independent, but the panel as such, was not quite so in my humble view.

        There were many recommendations they made to Council that were flawed and actually so pro developer and pro business, it was a biased set of recommendations, ignoring many honest and deservedly raised concerns by community groups and environmentalist.

        The Council simply more or less waved it through, the recommendations, they felt some pressure also, they knew a new local body election was closely ahead of them, and they would never have read all the details of reports or submissions anyway, they wanted to save their seats on Council, and also serve interests of certain business and other lobby groups.

        So it went. What many on the left and in general may not realise is what the National led government did in 2012/13, when changing the RMA, they brought in new requirements for so called ‘Section 32 Reports’ that Councils and local authorities in general have to prepare and present. The following was an important change to Section 32 requirements, tilting the whole scenario of requirements pro business and pro development:
        “The Resource Management Amendment Act 2013 introduced new requirements under s32. These new requirements do not change the purpose of s32. They do however encourage
        quantification of costs and benefits, emphasise the need to assess economic costs and benefits, and generally require a more robust, more clearly articulated analysis that is
        proportionate to the type of proposal”.

        See page 5 of the PDF found via this link:
        http://www.mfe.govt.nz/sites/default/files/media/RMA/guide-to-section-32-of-resource-manangemnt-amendment-act-1991.pdf

        So any proposed plan change or new plan has to be presented with a Section 32 Report, that must give a cost and benefit analysis, and as much else is now geared to be pro development, the Council or local authority must give consideration to such reports, when making decisions. Economic cost and benefit comparisons will be looked at, and they will mean, if jobs can be created, growth of whatever business activity can be proved, the environmental concerns will have to be weighed against this.

        End result is usually, a PRO BUSINESS AND PRO DEVELOPMENT decision, that will enable businesses and private developers to go ahead with doing what they see fit and proper, as long as other minimum plan requirements are met and balanced.

        I remember there having been very little public discussion of this, and now Nats and ACT want to bring even more pro business changes into the RMA, most idiots out there have no clue even what the RMA says in detail, so they are likely to get away with it yet again.

        We are screwed with such things happening.

        NZ has enough worries of its own, but who out there cares, but for a few?
        .

        1. Thanks Mike.

          I do remember those changes made in legislation that affected local government. I particularly remember National MP Dr Paul Hutchinson addressing a hall of people and congratulating his party for passing a bill that essentially got rid of the necessity to look for the other well-beings involved in the RMA – environmental, social and community IIRC.

          Your comment brought back all the details, and it is well worth remembering how corrosively these changes work.

  6. The latest news is Trump has fired FBI director, James Comey. The shit is really hitting the fan now!

  7. You make some really great points and we all need to keep being the hysteric in the room screaming ‘This is not normal! This man will kill us all.’ Because this is not a normal presidency, and using normal means is too slow to stop the damage he leaves in his wake.
    Though the legal system has done its best to stop grievous attacks on the constitutional rights of Americans the issue of the environment is problematic because of how much damage has been sustained already.
    I fear when Trump pulls the plug on the planet, the patient will die awaiting a judicial ruling on whether to plug it back in to life support.
    Thanks for your #resistance

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